POWER AND PRIVILEGE 2.0

Power and Privilege 2.0 is a collaborative blog Tuesday writes with her colleagues, Allen Frimpong and Kelly McGowan. The three of them met several years ago and immediately found a shared passion for working​with people and groups that are boldly striving for racial justice and social equity.

Each of them has been hosting conversations in communities and organizations locally, nationally, and internationally around this work and, simultaneously, they found that while there is progress and change, there is also a repeating pattern of getting lost. As a result of both progress and stuckness, they sensed an emerging desire for the "next" conversation, and began experimenting with new questions and inquiry. ​

"...Our project becomes less of one based on self-improvement or even collective self-improvement, and more about the creation of new worlds and futurities for which we currently have no language." — Andrea Smith

Who We Are

Three friends and colleagues — Allen Frimpong, Kelly McGowan, and Tuesday Ryan Hart — writing about our learning as we create and participate in the next conversations in social justice.

What We Do

CONTACT US

invite and instigate new conversations on race and equity with each other and our colleagues

reflect on what we've learned from years of social justice action — our failures and successes

question our own — and others' — deeply held convictions about what it takes to make systemic and structural change

bring new thinking and ways of working to current issues of equity and justice

What Clients Are Saying

"You want to know how we can all be together better? Tuesday Ryan-Hart has devoted her life to exploring this question. She is fearless in inviting people to turn toward one another on behalf of what matters most. And she does this with kindness, compassion and conviction. Whenever I'm asked to recommend someone to design and facilitate strategic change work—particularly around topics like race, class and economic justice—I always recommend Tuesday. Plus, she's fun as hell!~Deborah Frieze, Boston ​ Impact Initiative